| Literature DB >> 34881335 |
Alexandra-Diana Diaconu1, Iustina Ostafie1, Alexandr Ceasovschih2,3, Victorița Șorodoc2,3, Cătălina Lionte2,3, Codrina Ancuța1,3, Laurențiu Șorodoc2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a chronic multisystem autoimmune condition defined by a complex pathobiology, comprising excessive fibrosis of skin and internal organs, peripheral vasculopathy with endothelial cell dysfunction, inadequate vascular repair and neovascularization, and aberrant immunity. Vitamin D is a steroid hormone with pleiotropic effects beyond its traditional role in calcium and bone homeostasis. Since vitamin D has immunomodulatory, cardioprotective, and antifibrotic properties, it could potentially interfere with SSc pathogenesis. Suboptimal vitamin D levels are classically recognized in scleroderma, irrespective of clinical and serological phenotype. AIM: This systematic review is aimed at investigating and clarifying the role of vitamin D in SSc and emphasizing the association of vitamin D status with different clinical settings. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34881335 PMCID: PMC8648450 DOI: 10.1155/2021/9782994
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1Flowchart of study selection.
Characteristics of selected studies on serum vitamin D in systemic sclerosis.
| Reference | Study design | Patients | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lo Gullo et al., 2021 [ | Case-control study | 36 SSc patients and 36 healthy controls | Correlation between serum vitamin D and CD34+ cell ( |
| Isola et al., 2021 [ | Clinical trial | 35 SSc patients, 36 with periodontitis (PD), 36 with both SSc and periodontitis, and 37 controls | Lower vitamin D values in subjects with PD and SSc plus PD than to SSc and healthy subjects ( |
| Hax et al., 2020 [ | Case-control study | 50 SSc patients and 35 healthy nonmatched controls | Lower vitamin D levels in SSc patients ( |
| Paolino et al., 2020 [ | Retrospective study | 36 consecutive postmenopausal SSc female patients | Significant differences in malnourished SSc patients in the median values of PTH ( |
| González-Martín et al., 2020 [ | Cross-sectional study | 70 patients diagnosed with SSc (diffuse or limited forms) | Lower levels of vitamin D in 59% of the SSc patients. |
| Horváth et al., 2019 [ | Case-control study | 44 SSc patients and 33 healthy controls | Vitamin D deficiency in SSc patients ( |
| Caimmi et al., 2019 [ | Retrospective longitudinal study | 65 SSc patients | Negative association between vitamin D levels and the risk of digital ulcers developing ( |
| Di Liberto et al., 2019 [ | Prospective case-control study | 45 SSc patients and 35 controls | The treatment with 1,25(OH)(2)D of regulatory T cells increased the production of IL-10, a cytokine able to modulate immune response ( |
| Corallo et al., 2019 [ | Prospective study | 62 SSc Caucasian patients | No association between serum vitamin D levels and sarcopenia ( |
| Gupta et al., 2018 [ | Pilot study | 38 SSc patients, 38 controls | Significantly lower serum vitamin D levels in SSc patients compared with healthy controls ( |
| Taylan et al., 2018 [ | Cross-sectional study | 46 SSc patients and 30 healthy controls | Significantly lower vitamin D levels in SSc patients ( |
| Kotyla et al., 2018 [ | Case-control study | 48 patients with diffuse systemic sclerosis and 23 controls | A weak correlation between vitamin D levels and iFGF23 ( |
| Trombetta et al., 2017 [ | Retrospective study | 154 SSc patients | A significant correlation of vitamin D levels with lung involvement ( |
| Ahmadi et al., 2017 [ | Case-control study | 60 SSc patients (30 diffuse scleroderma and 30 limited scleroderma), 30 age- and sex-matched healthy controls | Lower serum levels of vitamin D in the SSc patients compared with healthy controls ( |
| An et al., 2017 [ | Meta-analysis | 554 SSc patients and 321 controls | Lower serum vitamin D levels in SSc compared with healthy controls, in dcSSc compared to lcSSc. |
| Hajialilo et al., 2017 [ | Cross-sectional study | 60 SSc patients and 60 healthy controls | Significantly lower vitamin D levels in SSc patients ( |
| Zhang et al., 2017 [ | Case-control study | 60 SSc patients and 60 healthy controls | Lower vitamin D levels ( |
| Giuggioli et al., 2017 [ | Case-control study | 140 patients | Hypovitaminosis D associated with autoimmune thyroiditis ( |
| Park et al., 2017 [ | Pilot study | 40 female SSc patients and 80 healthy controls | Vitamin D deficiency associated with digital ulcer ( |
| Cruz-Domínguez et al., 2017 [ | Cohort study | 220 SSc patients | Lower vitamin D levels in SSc with and without calcinosis. |
| Groseanu et al., 2016 [ | Cross-sectional study | 51 SSc patients | Positive correlation between decreased vitamin D levels and pulmonary fibrosis ( |
| Atteritano et al., 2016 [ | Case-control study | 40 patients with scleroderma and 40 healthy controls | Significantly lower serum vitamin D in SSc patients ( |
| Sampaio-Barros et al., 2016 [ | Cross-sectional study | 38 female patients with diffuse SSc | Lower levels of vitamin D in anti-Scl-70-positive compared to anti-Scl-70-negative SSc ( |
| Carmel et al., 2015 [ | Case-control study | 54 SSc patients and 41 healthy controls | Positive correlation between IgM 25(OH)D antibodies and scleroderma ( |
| Corrado et al., 2015 [ | Case-control study | 64 postmenopausal SSc patients and 35 healthy control postmenopausal women | Significantly lower 25(OH)D levels in dcSSc compared to the lcSSc ( |
| Atteritano et al., 2013 [ | Case-control study | 54 SSc women and 54 postmenopausal controls | Significantly lower vitamin D levels in SSc patients ( |
| Rios Fernández et al., 2012 [ | Case-control study | 100 SSc patients and 100 controls | Lower levels of vitamin D in SSc from the north of Spain in comparison with those in south of Spain ( |
| ibn Yacoub et al., 2012 [ | Case-control study | 60 SSc patients and 60 controls | Very low levels of vitamin D ( |
| Avouac et al., 2012 [ | Cross-sectional study | 71 women with SSc, 139 women with RA, and 227 healthy women | Low levels of vitamin D is a risk factor for fractures ( |
| Shinjo et al., 2011 [ | Case-control study | 10 patients with JoSSc and 10 healthy controls | High prevalence of 25(OH)D insufficiency in JoSSc ( |
| Arnson et al., 2011 [ | Retrospective cohort study | 327 European patients with SSc and 141 healthy controls | Lower serum vitamin D concentrations ( |
| Gambichler et al., 2011 [ | Observational study | 137 SSc patients | Lower vitamin D levels ( |
| Seriolo et al., 2011 [ | Case-control study | 53 SSc female patients with SSc and 35 sex-, age-, and season-matched control | During winter: vitamin D insufficiency in 60% SSc compared with 38% matched controls ( |
| Caramaschi et al., 2010 [ | Prospective study | 65 SSc patients | Association between patients with vitamin D deficiency and longer disease duration ( |
| Rios Fernández et al., 2010 [ | Cohort study | 63 SSc patients | Lower vitamin D levels. |
| Calzolari et al., 2009 [ | Case-control study | 60 SSc patients and 60 matched controls | Lower levels of vitamin D in SSc patients compared with controls ( |
| Vacca et al., 2009 [ | Prospective study | 156 consecutive SSc patients (90 from Northern France and 66 from Southern Italy) | Slight association between vitamin D and anti-centromere antibodies ( |
| Braun-Moscovici et al., 2008 [ | Retrospective study | 134 Mediterranean SSc patients | Hypovitaminosis D significantly correlated with ethnicity (Arab origin) ( |
| Hulshof et al., 2000 [ | Double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | 27 patients: 20 with morphea and 7 with SSc | No significant difference in SSc between the placebo and 1,25(OH)(2)D groups after 9 months of treatment in the skin score, esophageal body motility, and oral aperture. |
| Humbert el al., 1993 [ | Open prospective, uncontrolled study | 11 SSc patients | Vitamin D treatment improved significantly oral aperture and flexion index distance ( |
Figure 2Relationship between systemic sclerosis clinical manifestations and hypovitaminosis D.